Gary J. Rotella & Associates, P.A. v. Bellassai (In Re Bellassai)

451 B.R. 594
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Florida.
DecidedMay 20, 2011
Docket19-10700
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 451 B.R. 594 (Gary J. Rotella & Associates, P.A. v. Bellassai (In Re Bellassai)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, S.D. Florida. primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gary J. Rotella & Associates, P.A. v. Bellassai (In Re Bellassai), 451 B.R. 594 (Fla. 2011).

Opinion

*596 Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law

JOHN K. OLSON, Bankruptcy Judge.

On May 26, 2009, creditor Gary J. Rotel-la & Associates P.A. filed an adversary complaint seeking to block Debtor Carmen Bellassai’s discharge under 11 U.S.C. § 727(a)(2), (a)(3), (a)(4), and (a)(5). Rotel-la holds a state court default final judgment against the Debtor in the amount of $53,929.77, with a supplemental default final judgment in the amount of $65,170.85.

Findings of Fact

Debtor Carmen Bellassai is a gentleman who claims to have been unemployed since 1995. All of his personal and living expenses have been paid by his girlfriend, Carol Anne Bello, since at least 1998 (likely earlier). 1 , 2 Ms. Bello has been able to support herself and the Debtor because she has owned a successful automobile and towing business, Sun Car Care and Towing, since 1995. Since opening Sun Car Care, Ms. Bello has paid many of her expenses (and the Debtor’s) out of Sun Car Care’s business account. Sun Car Care’s success has allowed Ms. Bello to purchase valuable antiques and artwork, to drive nice cars, and to purchase and furnish a nice home.

Sun Car Care began operating when Ms. Bello purchased the assets of the Debtor’s now defunct Sun Automotive Services, Inc. Sun Automotive was a car care and towing business that operated from approximately 1987 to July or August of 1995. The Debt- or testified that his business partner disappeared in 1995 during an IRS audit of Sun Automotive and took the money in the company bank account with him. In June of 1995, a $69,567.94 tax lien attached to Sun Automotive. Also in the summer of 1995, the Debtor’s divorce from his former wife was finalized. It was against this backdrop that the Debtor sold the assets of Sun Automotive to Ms. Bello in late 1995. 3

Ms. Bello purchased a going concern, including Sun Automotive’s various physical assets, its location, and the continued employment of a number of Sun Automotive’s employees for $25,000. 4 Ms. Bello did not perform any due diligence before purchasing the business and had little pri- or experience in the car care and towing business. 5 Although Ms. Bello employs an accountant, she testified that she does not review profit and loss statements, does not know what happens to invoices, does not review Sun Car Care’s receipts as a usual practice, and does not review the business’s bank statements. In her 2004 Ex- *597 animation, Ms. Bello contended that she “mostly oversees” the business and does sales for accounts, but at trial she testified that her sales activities involved driving around town and dropping off Sun Car Care flyers at various locations such as grocery stores and post offices. Ms. Bello said she “could be” at the business for up to 20 hours per week and that was “a lot” of her time. Art Gaetano, the company’s vice-president, was asked what Ms. Bello normally does when on the premises. He testified that she comes to “see how things are going” yet seemingly contradicted that by testifying that Ms. Bello only stays a few minutes and is “in and out.” It is suspect that Ms. Bello testified that she “mostly oversees” the business but spends little time on the actual premises and knows almost nothing of Sun Car Care’s finances. Based on these facts and evidence from Ms. Bello’s 2004 examination that she has little knowledge of Sun Car Care’s operation, I find that Ms. Bello has little to do with the operation and success of the business.

On the other hand, the Debtor has been in the automotive business for about four decades (for the most part car care and towing) and had been involved in the start up and operation of numerous automotive businesses. The Debtor started with his father’s gas station (which had a full service mechanic) and his brother’s gas station and auto repair business before he and his brother opened Carsal, Inc. (an auto repair and towing business) in the 1970s. The Debtor worked with his brother at Carsal until he opened Sun Automotive Services on his own. He was also involved with CJS Corporation, a car care and towing business that he, his brother, and their father ran. 6

■ The Debtor and Ms. Bello proffer a story that the Debtor is a frail old man who puttered around Sun Car Care, occasionally answering phones. The following statements come from the Debtor’s 2004 Examination:

Q: —in 1995, you stopped working, that was the last time you worked, gainfully employed, 1995?
A: Well, I stopped getting paid, yes.
Q: Okay, so after 1995 you have not earned any money?
A: No.
Q: Okay.
A: No.
Q: Correct?
A: Correct.
Q: Did you continue to work or otherwise work for someone, anyone, for free?
A: Just her.
Q: Okay. How many hours a week and for how long?
A: I don’t even remember. I just help[ed] when I could.
I wasn’t really that healthy back then. So, whatever I could, I helped her with.
Q: What would you do for her?
A: Answer the phone, basically. 7

Although the Debtor and Ms. Bello did an excellent job of sticking to their story, I find their characterization of the Debtor’s minimal role in Sun Car Care to be less than credible.

The Debtor was allegedly not helping Ms. Bello when she “opened” the business, *598 and when asked how she determined pricing at Sun Car Care, she gave no credible explanation. Instead, she replied that “other people” would tell her the appropriate pricing if someone called in for an estimate, and she did not specify who those “other people” were. When asked what she would tell customers if no one else was there, she said, “[T]here are basic towing rules. I would go by those.” When asked who made the rules, she said, “they were on the wall” of Sun Car Care and that they were there when she bought the business. Ms. Bello conceded that she did not know how to do an estimate for her business and completely replied upon “other people” to estimate.

The Debtor ran that very same business for a long time before Ms. Bello bought it, they have known one another since before 1995 (apparently since the 1980s), they continued to have contact after the 1995 “sale” of the business, and they eventually moved in together as girlfriend and boyfriend. In short, the Debtor has been available to Ms. Bello on a continuous basis since 1995.

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Bluebook (online)
451 B.R. 594, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gary-j-rotella-associates-pa-v-bellassai-in-re-bellassai-flsb-2011.